List of geological features on Titan
This is a list of named geological features on Saturn's moon Titan. Official names for these features have only been announced since the 2000s, as Titan's surface was virtually unknown before the arrival of the Cassini–Huygens probe.[1][2] Some features were known by informal nicknames beforehand; these names are noted where appropriate. Note that some features with a physical size given by "diameter" may not be circular; then the number refers to the length.[note 1]
Albedo features
[edit]Albedo features on Titan are named after sacred or enchanted places in world mythologies and literature.[3]
Bright albedo features
[edit]Name | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named After | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adiri | 10°S 210°W / 10°S 210°W | 0 | 2006 | Adiri, Melanesian paradise[4] | WGPSN |
Dilmun | 15°N 175°W / 15°N 175°W | 0 | 2006 | Dilmun, Sumerian heaven | WGPSN |
Quivira | 0°N 15°W / 0°N 15°W | 0 | 2006 | Quivira, legendary city in southwestern America | WGPSN |
Tsegihi | 40°S 10°W / 40°S 10°W | 0 | 2006 | Tsegihi, Navajo sacred place | WGPSN |
Xanadu | 15°S 100°W / 15°S 100°W | 3400 | 2006 | Xanadu, an imaginary palace in Coleridge's Kubla Khan | WGPSN |
Dark albedo features
[edit]Name | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named After | Informal Name | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aaru | 10°N 340°W / 10°N 340°W | 0 | 2006 | Aaru, Egyptian paradise | WGPSN | |
Aztlan | 10°S 20°W / 10°S 20°W | 0 | 2006 | Aztlán, mythical Aztec homeland | Southern part of 'Lying H' | WGPSN |
Belet | 5°S 255°W / 5°S 255°W | 0 | 2006 | Belet, Malay paradise | WGPSN | |
Ching-tu | 30°S 205°W / 30°S 205°W | 0 | 2006 | Ching-tu, Chinese Buddhist paradise | WGPSN | |
Fensal | 5°N 30°W / 5°N 30°W | 0 | 2006 | Fensalir, Norse heavenly mansion | Northern part of 'Lying H' | WGPSN |
Mezzoramia | 70°S 0°W / 70°S -0°E | 0 | 2006 | Mezzoramia, African oasis of happiness from Italian legend | WGPSN | |
Senkyo | 5°S 320°W / 5°S 320°W | 0 | 2006 | Senkyo, Japanese paradise | WGPSN | |
Shangri-La | 10°S 165°W / 10°S 165°W | 0 | 2006 | Shangri-La, Tibetan paradise | WGPSN |
Arcūs
[edit]Titanean arcūs (arc-shaped features) are named after deities of happiness.[5]
Name | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named After | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hotei Arcus | 28°S 79°W / 28°S 79°W | 600 | 2006 | Hotei, Japanese god | WGPSN |
Colles
[edit]Colles are small hills or knobs which are named after characters in J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth.[6]
Name | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named After | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arwen Colles | 7°30′S 250°00′W / 7.5°S 250.0°W | 64 | 19 December 2012 | Arwen, character from Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy | WGPSN |
Bilbo Colles | 4°12′S 38°36′W / 4.2°S 38.6°W | 164 | 19 December 2012 | Bilbo Baggins, titular character of Tolkien's The Hobbit | WGPSN |
Faramir Colles | 4°00′N 153°48′W / 4.0°N 153.8°W | 82 | 19 December 2012 | Faramir, character from Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy | WGPSN |
Gandalf Colles | 14°36′N 209°30′W / 14.6°N 209.5°W | 102 | 20 July 2015 | Gandalf, character from Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings trilogy | WGPSN |
Handir Colles | 10°00′N 356°42′W / 10.0°N 356.7°W | 100 | 19 December 2012 | Handir, character from Tolkien's The Silmarillion | WGPSN |
Nimloth Colles | 11°54′N 151°18′W / 11.9°N 151.3°W | 90 | 19 December 2012 | Nimloth, name of a character and a tree from Tolkien's Middle-Earth | WGPSN |
Craters
[edit]Craters on Titan are named after deities of wisdom.[7]
Name | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named After | Informal Name | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Afekan | 25°48′N 200°18′W / 25.8°N 200.3°W | 115.0 | 4 August 2008 | Afekan, New Guinean creator goddess | WGPSN | |
Beag | 34°42′S 169°36′W / 34.7°S 169.6°W | 145.0 | 15 April 2015 | Beag, Irish/Celtic goddess | WGPSN | |
Forseti | 25°30′N 10°24′W / 25.5°N 10.4°W | 115.0 | 15 April 2015 | Forseti, Norse god | WGPSN | |
Hano | 40°18′N 14°54′E / 40.3°N 14.9°E | 100.0 | 23 December 2011 | Hano, Bella Coola (northwestern USA and western Canada) goddess of education knowledge and magic. She manifested as a shaman so she could teach the people | WGPSN | |
Ksa | 14°00′N 65°24′W / 14.0°N 65.4°W | 29.0 | 11 October 2006 | Ksa, Lakota/Oglala spirit | WGPSN | |
Menrva | 20°06′N 87°12′W / 20.1°N 87.2°W | 392.0 | 2006 | Menrva, Etruscan goddess | 'Circus Maximus' | WGPSN |
Momoy | 11°36′N 44°36′W / 11.6°N 44.6°W | 40.0 | 23 December 2011 | Momoy, Chumash ancestor shaman and goddess of magic | WGPSN | |
Mystis | 0°06′N 194°54′W / 0.1°N 194.9°W | 20.0 | 20 July 2015 | Mystis, Greek nymph | WGPSN | |
Selk | 7°00′N 199°00′W / 7.0°N 199.0°W | 80.0 | 15 February 2008 | Selk, Egyptian goddess | WGPSN | |
Sinlap | 11°18′N 16°00′W / 11.3°N 16.0°W | 80.0 | 2006 | Sinlap, Kachin spirit | WGPSN | |
Soi | 24°18′N 140°54′W / 24.3°N 140.9°W | 75.0 | 3 February 2012 | Soi, Melanesian (New Ireland Island Papua New Guinea) god of wisdom | WGPSN |
Faculae
[edit]Faculae (bright spots) are named after islands on Earth that are not politically independent.[8] Groups of faculae are named after archipelagos on Earth.
Fluctūs
[edit]The term "fluctus" refers to flow terrain. Fluctūs on Titan are named after mythological figures associated with beauty.[9]
Fluctus | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ara Fluctus | 39°48′N 118°24′W / 39.8°N 118.4°W | 70 | 2 March 2007 | Ara the Beautiful, Armenian legendary figure | WGPSN |
Leilah Fluctus | 50°30′N 77°48′W / 50.5°N 77.8°W | 190 | 2 March 2007 | Layla, Persian goddess | WGPSN |
Mohini Fluctus | 11°47′S 38°32′W / 11.78°S 38.53°W | 347 | 13 November 2012 | Mohini, Indian goddess of beauty and magic | WGPSN |
Rohe Fluctus | 47°18′N 37°45′W / 47.3°N 37.75°W | 103 | 2 March 2007 | Rohe, Māori goddess | WGPSN |
Winia Fluctus | 49°00′N 46°00′W / 49.0°N 46.0°W | 300 | 2 March 2007 | Winia, Indonesian first woman | WGPSN |
Flumina
[edit]A flumen is a feature that looks like a channel carved by liquid. Flumina refers to a network of rivers. Some flumina are not found near liquid bodies, which are labelled as "dry valley". They are named after mythical or imaginary rivers.[10]
Flumina | Coordinates | Liquid Body[note 2] | Length (km)[note 1] | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Apanohuaya Flumen | 84°17′N 297°14′W / 84.29°N 297.24°W | Punga Mare | 64 | 12 March 2020 | Apanohuaya,[11] mythological river in the Aztec Underworld | WGPSN |
Celadon Flumina | 73°42′S 28°48′W / 73.7°S 28.8°W | dry valley | 160 | 8 October 2014 | Celadon, river in Homer's Iliad | WGPSN |
Elivagar Flumina | 19°18′N 78°30′W / 19.3°N 78.5°W | dry valley | 260 | 27 September 2007 | The Élivágar, a group of ice rivers in Norse mythology | WGPSN |
Gihon Flumen | 76°49′N 215°33′W / 76.81°N 215.55°W | Ligeia Mare | 225 | 14 December 2020 | Gihon, Biblical second river of paradise that flows from Eden | WGPSN |
Hubur Flumen | 70°12′S 192°54′W / 70.2°S 192.9°W | Ontario Lacus | 84 | 27 December 2015 | Hubur, river of the underworld in Mesopotamian mythology | WGPSN |
Karesos Flumen | 70°54′S 194°48′W / 70.9°S 194.8°W | Ontario Lacus | 83 | 27 December 2015 | River in Homer's Iliad | WGPSN |
Kokytos Flumina | 72°43′N 255°00′W / 72.71°N 255°W | Ligeia Mare | 305 | 14 December 2020 | Cocytus, river of lamentations in the Greek underworld | WGPSN |
Sambation Flumina | 87°20′N 90°07′W / 87.33°N 90.12°W | Punga Mare | 210 | 14 December 2020 | Sambation, legendary river in Jewish literature | WGPSN |
Saraswati Flumen | 74°36′S 193°30′W / 74.6°S 193.5°W | Ontario Lacus | 2.9 | 27 December 2015 | Saraswati, river in Hindu mythology | WGPSN |
Vid Flumina | 72°54′N 242°30′W / 72.9°N 242.5°W | Ligeia Mare | 158 | 13 February 2013 | One of the rivers in Élivágar. | WGPSN |
Xanthus Flumen | 83°28′N 242°46′W / 83.47°N 242.76°W | Ligeia Mare | 78 | 6 November 2015 | Name of the Gods of the river Skamandros in the Iliad. | WGPSN |
Freta
[edit]A fretum (plural freta) is a strait of liquid connecting two larger liquid bodies. They are named after characters from the Foundation series of science fiction novels by Isaac Asimov.[12]
Fretum | Coordinates | Length (km)[note 1] | Approval Date | Named after | Informal name | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bayta Fretum | 73°00′N 311°12′W / 73°N 311.2°W | 165 | 19 January 2015 | Bayta Darell, fictional character in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series, wife of the Trader Toran Darell and grandmother of famous author Arcadia Darell. | WGPSN | |
Hardin Fretum | 57°18′N 317°48′W / 57.3°N 317.8°W | 246 | 19 January 2015 | Salvor Hardin, fictional character in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series, first Mayor of the planet Terminus. | WGPSN | |
Seldon Fretum | 66°00′N 316°36′W / 66°N 316.6°W | 67 | 19 January 2015 | Hari Seldon, the fictional, intellectual hero of Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series, First Minister of the Galactic Empire. | 'Throat of Kraken'[13] | WGPSN |
Trevize Fretum | 74°24′N 269°54′W / 74.4°N 269.9°W | 173 | 19 January 2015 | Golan Trevize, fictional character in Isaac Asimov's Foundation Series, councilman of the planet Terminus. | WGPSN |
Insulae
[edit]Insulae are islands within Titan's seas. They are named after legendary islands.[14]
Insula | Coordinates | Liquid body | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bermoothes Insula | 67°06′N 317°06′W / 67.1°N 317.1°W | Kraken Mare | 124 | 19 January 2015 | Bermoothes, an enchanted island in Shakespeare's Tempest | WGPSN |
Bimini Insula | 73°18′N 305°24′W / 73.3°N 305.4°W | Kraken Mare | 39 | 19 January 2015 | Bimini, island in Arawak legend said to contain the fountain of youth. | WGPSN |
Bralgu Insula | 76°12′N 251°30′W / 76.2°N 251.5°W | Ligeia Mare | 55 | 19 January 2015 | Baralku, in Yolngu culture, the island of the dead and the place where the Djanggawul, the three creator siblings, originated. | WGPSN |
Buyan Insula | 77°18′N 245°06′W / 77.3°N 245.1°W | Ligeia Mare | 48 | 19 January 2015 | Buyan, a rocky island in Russian folk tales located on the south shore of Baltic Sea | WGPSN |
Hawaiki Insulae | 84°19′N 327°04′W / 84.32°N 327.07°W | Punga Mare | 35 | 14 December 2020 | Hawaiki, original home island of the Polynesian people in local mythology | WGPSN |
Hufaidh Insulae | 67°00′N 320°18′W / 67°N 320.3°W | Kraken Mare | 152 | 19 January 2015 | Hufaidh, legendary island in the marshes of southern Iraq | WGPSN |
Krocylea Insulae | 69°06′N 302°24′W / 69.1°N 302.4°W | Kraken Mare | 74 | 19 January 2015 | Crocylea, mythological Greek island in the Ionian Sea, near Ithaca | WGPSN |
Mayda Insula | 79°06′N 312°12′W / 79.1°N 312.2°W | Kraken Mare | 168 | 11 April 2008 | Mayda, legendary island in the northeast Atlantic | WGPSN |
Meropis Insula | 83°51′N 313°41′W / 83.85°N 313.68°W | Punga Mare | 30 | 14 December 2020 | Meropis, fictional island mentioned by ancient Greek writer Theopompus in his work Philippica | WGPSN |
Onogoro Insula | 83°17′N 311°42′W / 83.28°N 311.7°W | Punga Mare | 15 | 14 December 2020 | Onogoro Island, Japanese mythological island | WGPSN |
Penglai Insula | 72°12′N 308°42′W / 72.2°N 308.7°W | Kraken Mare | 94 | 19 January 2015 | Penglai, mythological Chinese mountain island where immortals and gods lived. | WGPSN |
Planctae Insulae | 77°30′N 251°18′W / 77.5°N 251.3°W | Ligeia Mare | 64 | 19 January 2015 | Symplegades, the "clashing rocks" in Bosphorus which only Argo was said to have successfully passed. | WGPSN |
Royllo Insula | 68°18′N 297°12′W / 68.3°N 297.2°W | Kraken Mare | 103 | 19 January 2015 | Royllo, legendary island in the Atlantic, on verge of unknown, near Antilla and Saint Brandan. | WGPSN |
Labyrinthi
[edit]Labyrinthi (complexes of intersecting valleys or ridges)[15] on Titan are named after planets from the fictional Dune universe created by Frank Herbert.[16][17]
Lacunae
[edit]Lacunae are dark areas with the appearance of dry lake beds, which are named after intermittent lakes on Earth.[18]
Lacūs
[edit]Lacūs (plural form of lacus used in Titan geological nomenclature) are hydrocarbon lakes.[19]
Large ringed features
[edit]Large ring features are named after deities of wisdom in world mythology.[20]
Ring feature | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Guabonito | 10°54′S 150°48′W / 10.9°S 150.8°W | 55 | 2006 | Guabonito, Taíno sea goddess | WGPSN |
Nath | 30°30′S 7°42′W / 30.5°S 7.7°W | 95 | 2006 | Irish goddess of wisdom | WGPSN |
Paxsi | 5°00′N 341°12′W / 5.0°N 341.2°W | 120 | 15 October 2010 | Aymara goddess of the moon and wisdom | WGPSN |
Veles | 2°00′N 137°18′W / 2.0°N 137.3°W | 45 | 2006 | Veles, Slavic god | WGPSN |
Maculae
[edit]Titanean maculae (dark spots) are named after deities of happiness, peace, and harmony in world mythology.[21]
Macula | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eir Macula | 24°00′S 114°42′W / 24.0°S 114.7°W | 145 | 2006 | Eir, Norse goddess. | WGPSN |
Elpis Macula | 31°12′N 27°00′W / 31.2°N 27.0°W | 500 | 2006 | Elpis, Greek god | WGPSN |
Ganesa Macula | 50°00′N 87°18′W / 50.0°N 87.3°W | 160 | 2006 | Ganesa, Hindu god | WGPSN |
Genetaska Macula | 23°30′N 196°18′W / 23.5°N 196.3°W | 24 | 20 July 2015 | Genetaska, Peace Queen of the Iroquois | WGPSN |
Omacatl Macula | 17°36′N 37°12′W / 17.6°N 37.2°W | 225 | 2006 | Omacatl, Aztec god. | WGPSN |
Polaznik Macula | 41°06′S 280°24′W / 41.1°S 280.4°W | 346.90 | 5 April 2010 | Polaznik, Slavic god | WGPSN |
Polelya Macula | 50°00′N 56°00′W / 50.0°N 56.0°W | 175 | 2 March 2007 | Polelya, Slavic god | WGPSN |
Maria
[edit]Maria (plural of mare) are hydrocarbon seas.[22]
Montes
[edit]Mountains are named after mountains from the fictional Middle-Earth created by J.R.R. Tolkien.[23]
Paterae
[edit]Paterae are caldera or deep-wall craters with a possible volcanic origin. Sotra Patera was formerly named Sotra Facula, which followed the naming theme for Faculae.[24] No nomenclature currently exists for this class of features on Titan.
Patera | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sotra Patera | 12°30′S 39°48′W / 12.5°S 39.8°W | 40 | 19 December 2012 | Sotra, Norwegian island | WGPSN |
Planitiae
[edit]Planitiae (low plains) on Titan are named after planets from the fictional Dune universe created by Frank Herbert.[16][25]
Planitia | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Arrakis Planitia | 78°24′S 117°00′W / 78.4°S 117.0°W | 337.40 | 5 April 2010 | Arrakis | WGPSN |
Buzzell Planitia | 66°18′S 262°42′W / 66.3°S 262.7°W | 870 | 18 March 2016 | Buzzell | WGPSN |
Caladan Planitia | 31°00′N 226°00′W / 31.0°N 226.0°W | 2800 | 8 October 2014 | Caladan | WGPSN |
Chusuk Planitia | 5°00′S 23°30′W / 5.0°S 23.5°W | 125 | 4 August 2009 | Chusuk | WGPSN |
Giedi Planitia | 5°13′N 357°01′W / 5.22°N 357.02°W | 303.25 | 24 August 2017 | Giedi | WGPSN |
Hagal Planitia | 60°36′S 345°00′W / 60.6°S 345.0°W | 435 | 27 December 2015 | Hagal | WGPSN |
Poritrin Planitia | 48°00′N 24°00′W / 48.0°N 24.0°W | 1900 | 8 October 2014 | Poritrin | WGPSN |
Romo Planitia | 82°48′S 201°00′W / 82.8°S 201.0°W | 400 | 27 December 2015 | Romo | WGPSN |
Rossak Planitia | 71°00′S 355°00′W / 71.0°S 355°W | 512 | 27 December 2015 | Rossak | WGPSN |
Xuttah Planitia | 10°36′N 167°41′W / 10.60°N 167.69°W | 18 | 13 April 2022 | Xuttah | WGPSN |
Regiones
[edit]Regiones (regions distinctly different from their surroundings) are named after deities of peace and happiness.[26]
Regio | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Concordia Regio | 20°00′S 241°00′W / 20.0°S 241.0°W | 1500 | 5 January 2012 | Concordia, the Roman goddess of divinity and harmony | WGPSN |
Hetpet Regio | 22°00′S 292°00′W / 22.0°S 292.0°W | 1080 | 5 January 2012 | Hetpet, the Egyptian personification of happiness | WGPSN |
Hotei Regio | 26°00′S 78°00′W / 26.0°S 78.0°W | 500 | 7 May 2009 | Budai, Chinese/Japanese god | WGPSN |
Ochumare Regio | 10°24′N 348°06′W / 10.4°N 348.1°W | 939 | 14 September 2017 | Ochumare, Puertan Rican goddess of happiness and weather | WGPSN |
Tui Regio | 24°30′S 124°54′W / 24.5°S 124.9°W | 1200 | 2006 | Tui, Chinese goddess. | WGPSN |
Sinūs
[edit]Sinus (bays) within seas or lakes are named after terrestrial bays, coves, fjords or inlets.[27]
Terrae
[edit]Terrae are extensive landmasses. As with the albedo features, they are named after sacred and enchanted locations from cultures across the world.[29]
Terra | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Garotman Terra | 13°30′S 348°00′W / 13.5°S 348.0°W | 970 | 5 January 2012 | Garotman, the Iranian paradise that the souls of faithful men inhabit | WGPSN |
Tollan Terra | 6°24′N 322°42′W / 6.4°N 322.7°W | 800 | 5 January 2012 | Tollan, the Aztec paradise where crops never wilt | WGPSN |
Tsiipiya Terra | 2°50′N 340°07′W / 2.83°N 340.12°W | 573.24 | 24 August 2017 | Tsiipiya, the Hopi name for Mount Taylor in New Mexico, USA | WGPSN |
Yalaing Terra | 19°30′S 324°00′W / 19.5°S 324.0°W | 980 | 5 January 2012 | Yalaing, the Australian spirit land for good souls with clean water and game | WGPSN |
Undae
[edit]Undae are dune fields. On Titan they are named after Greek deities of wind.[30]
Undae | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aura Undae | 13°47′N 226°52′W / 13.79°N 226.86°W | 490 | 20 July 2015 | Aura, goddess of the morning wind. | WGPSN |
Boreas Undae | 6°S 215°W / 6°S 215°W | 260 | 5 December 2011 | Boreas, Greek god of the north wind. | WGPSN |
Eurus Undae | 7°30′S 210°18′W / 7.5°S 210.3°W | 220 | 5 December 2011 | Eurus, Greek personification of the east wind. | WGPSN |
Notus Undae | 10°00′S 211°06′W / 10°S 211.1°W | 530 | 5 December 2011 | Notus, Greek god of the south or southwest wind. | WGPSN |
Zephyrus Undae | 8°30′S 217°06′W / 8.5°S 217.1°W | 130 | 5 December 2011 | Zephyrus, Greek personification of the gentle west wind. | WGPSN |
Virgae
[edit]Virgae (streaks of colour) are named after rain gods in world mythologies.[31]
Virga | Coordinates | Diameter (km) | Approval Date | Named after | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bacab Virgae | 19°00′S 151°00′W / 19.0°S 151.0°W | 485 | 2006 | Bacab, Mayan rain god | WGPSN |
Hobal Virga | 35°00′S 166°00′W / 35.0°S 166.0°W | 1075 | 2006 | Hobal, Arabian rain god. | WGPSN |
Kalseru Virga | 36°00′S 137°00′W / 36.0°S 137.0°W | 630 | 2006 | Kalseru, Australian Aborigine rain god. | WGPSN |
Perkunas Virgae | 27°00′S 162°00′W / 27.0°S 162.0°W | 980 | 2006 | Perkūnas, Lithuanian supreme god | WGPSN |
Shiwanni Virgae | 25°00′S 32°00′W / 25.0°S 32.0°W | 1400 | 2006 | Shiwanni, Zuni rain god | WGPSN |
Tishtrya Virgae | 23°48′N 179°48′W / 23.8°N 179.8°W | 276 | 20 July 2015 | Tishtrya, Persian rain god | WGPSN |
Tlaloc Virgae | 23°42′N 207°42′W / 23.7°N 207.7°W | 600 | 20 July 2015 | Tlaloc, Aztec rain god | WGPSN |
Uanui Virgae | 45°12′N 235°18′W / 45.2°N 235.3°W | 917 | 5 April 2010 | Uanui, Māori rain god | WGPSN |
Informal names for previously unnamed features
[edit]Because the exact nature of many surface features remain mysterious, a number of features took time to receive formal names and are known by nicknames. In most cases, indications of brightness and darkness refer not to visible light, but to the infrared images used to look through Titan's obscuring haze.[32]
- 'The Sickle': a large, dark, sickle-shaped region identified by the Hubble Space Telescope.
- 'Throat of Kraken': unofficial name for the strait that separates the north and south basins of Kraken Mare, before officially being named Seldon Fretum. It was used in early publications that hypothesized about its role with tidal dissipation and surface currents between the two basins of Kraken Mare.[13][33]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Titan Features". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved September 8, 2010.
- ^ Overbye, Dennis (3 December 2019). "Go Ahead, Take a Spin on Titan - Saturn's biggest moon has gasoline for rain, soot for snow and a subsurface ocean of ammonia. Now there's a map to help guide the search for possible life there". The New York Times. Retrieved 5 December 2019.
- ^ "Titan albedo features". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Melanesian Mythology | Encyclopedia.com". encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-03-15.
- ^ "Titan arcus". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan Colles". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
- ^ "Titan craters". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan facula, faculae". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan fluctus". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan river, rivers". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Mythological Journey to the Aztec Underworld | WilderUtopia.com". wilderutopia.com. 2018-10-10. Retrieved 2020-03-15.
- ^ "Titan fretum". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ a b Lorenz, Ralph D.; Kirk, Randolph L.; Hayes, Alexander G.; Anderson, Yanhua Z.; Lunine, Jonathan I.; Tokano, Tetsuya; Turtle, Elizabeth P.; Malaska, Michael J.; Soderblom, Jason M.; Lucas, Antoine; Karatekin, Özgür (2014-07-15). "A radar map of Titan Seas: Tidal dissipation and ocean mixing through the throat of Kraken". Icarus. 237: 9–15. Bibcode:2014Icar..237....9L. doi:10.1016/j.icarus.2014.04.005. ISSN 0019-1035.
- ^ "Titan islands". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ Greeley, Ronald (2013). Introduction to Planetary Geomorphology. Cambridge University Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-521-86711-5.
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- ^ "Titan large ringed feature". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan macula, maculae". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
- ^ "Titan mare, maria". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
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- ^ "Titan unde, undae". USGS Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. Retrieved 14 March 2020.
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